BIRD GUIDING AROUND OSLO

Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Some eye candy and a polar brute

After yesterday’s fiasco I had to do penance to both the environment
and my body and hope to regain some credit with the Bird Gods. As I had a lunchtime
appointment in town with some nice cheese (courtesy of Egil Ween, one of Norway’s
top birders, Værøy regular and importer of exclusive foods) it was a no brainer
to do the Oslo waterfront by public transport and foot.

Between 10-10:30 the bays by the Opera had only 190 Herring
Gulls but when I returned at 12:40 the number of gulls had risen to nearly 500
and amongst them was a 1st winter Glaucous Gull. This bird is
presumably the same as the one I found on 31 Jan at the Alna
tip (my pictures don’t allow me to be 100% sure but I can’t see any differences).
However it does seem quite clearly to be one of the birds I saw at the dump at
Askim on 18 Jan (scapulars, primary pattern, tertial pattern and
lines on face) so very interesting that both the Iceland Gull and a Glauc have relocated
from Askim to Oslo. It was a pleasure to see it by the Opera rather than
scavenging rubbish from a tip! Between 11-12:00 another observer had seen the 2nd
winter Iceland Gull but not the Glaucous. He also had around 500 Herring Gulls
so clearly gulls start arriving here after around 11am and there is turnover
amongst the birds. The birds are mostly loafing, preening, bathing and drinking
although there is some bread to be fought over in the area. I believe though
that most of the birds have been at the tip earlier in the day and then retire
here once they have had their full of sh*t.

There was incredibly little else to see with no seaducks
although a flock of Long-tailed Tits feeding in ornamental trees in front of
the City Hall was a huge surprise.

All pictures today were with the superzoom. It performed
surprisingly well with the tits which were in sunlight and allowed a very low
ISO but the Glaucous Gull was in the shade and the correspondingly higher ISO
is noticeable in the picture quality. I have taken on some feedback I received
(takk Terje!) and will relegate the pictures of the boring gull to the end of
the post and lead with the eye candy tits.

Two bundles of feathers - Long-tailed Tits (stjertmeis)

the superzoom captured the moving bird very sharply but keeping the moving bird in frame was not so easy

This and the next three pictures show a Glaucous Gull undergoing weight loss therapy

these nuts (at least that's what I think they are) suddenly appeared on the ice and were squabbled over (I assume a gull had a found a bag of nuts and these fell out)

Search This Blog

Pages

About Me

My name is Simon Rix and I am an English birder who has lived in Oslo since 2001. I am a member of the Norwegian Rarities Committee (NSKF) and bird guide.
This blog will primarily record my birding around Oslo.